Radical
in sentence
1428 examples of Radical in a sentence
What is needed is a conceptual framework to help businesses, governments, and individuals anticipate the
radical
technology-driven shifts – in business models, ethics, and social issues – on the horizon.
In this maelstrom, new
radical
groups with transnational agendas are blossoming.
If the FIS group is lucky, there will also be some
radical
input from thinkers that do not presently have access to first world infrastructure.
Today, some of the most
radical
new ideas in second generation artificial intelligence (so-called “autonomous agents”) are incubating in Prague.
Bush’s foreign-policy paradigm of an alliance of “moderates” to defeat the “extremists” – a model too enthusiastically seconded by an unimaginative Israeli leadership and by those Arabs (led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia) who dread the forces of
radical
change – has collapsed.
Not only Israel and the US, but also Egypt and Saudi Arabia have hoped for the political demise of this friend of every
radical
regional cause – from Hamas and Iran to the anti-Western forces in Lebanon – that they oppose.
Pursuing
radical
goals does not necessarily mean that a country will act irrationally.
This has triggered a search for a
radical
redefinition of central banks’ objectives – and has cast doubt on the appropriateness of maintaining their independence.
Indeed, while the demands of millenarians can never be met, thus leaving repression as the only means to deal with them, nationalism may be (and often is) effectively addressed through political means: when the legitimate and more widely shared nationalist goals are met, the
radical
fringe often loses its wider appeal and withers away.
Paving the way for effective negative-interest-rate policy is a more
radical
– but by far the more elegant – solution.
If the rest accepted this bottom-up calculation, society would miss out on the 0.5% boost to annual growth that this
radical
innovation ultimately brought about.
And, despite the mention of a new, enlarged agreement with Iran, Trump continues to embrace the
radical
visions of his new secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, and national security adviser, John Bolton.
In fact, successful centrist political movements belong to what sociologist Anthony Giddens called the
radical
center: they are ideologically intense and have distinct ideas of their own.
Radical
policies do not pay; but
radical
truthfulness does.
Everyone knows that these changes ought to be radical, even semi-federal.
In theory, the advantage of this "big bang" enlargement is that it may concentrate minds on the need for a
radical
re-think of the decision-making processes in a bigger EU.
One thing to be said for monarchs is that they provide people with a sense of continuity, which can be useful in times of crisis or
radical
change.
The only remaining questions now concern how quickly US policy will change, and how
radical
those changes will be.
Critics view this as a
radical
departure from seven decades of pacifism.
Meanwhile, the first two “arrows” of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic program –
radical
monetary-policy easing and increased government spending – seem to have given the country’s long-stagnant economy a lift.
By contrast, grand coalitions are, in the long term, likely to raise doubts about the system and encourage
radical
groups.
The same may also be true if narrow winners adopt a
radical
agenda, as some think George W. Bush has done in America and many feared Andrés Manuel Lopéz Obrador would do in Mexico.
But a helicopter-money program – a fanciful idea when Milton Friedman proposed it in 1969 – would also be a
radical
departure for policymakers, requiring an abundance of caution about citizen and investor perception, confidence, and solid governance structures.
And agenda items such as tax cuts, the Mexican border wall, and the renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement – to say nothing of Trump’s own emotional outbursts – are fueling America’s
radical
right.
If ideas like negative interest rates and higher inflation targets sound dangerously radical, well,
radical
is relative.
Unless central banks figure out a convincing way to address their paralysis at the zero bound, there is likely to be a continuing barrage of outside-the-box proposals that are far more
radical.
A central bank, it was argued, never runs out of options for stimulating aggregate demand and stoking inflation, provided it is willing to resort to
radical
measures.
Reviving conservation, management, and distribution efforts could reduce water consumption and increase efficiency, but these measures need to be combined with
radical
reforms to speed the transition away from oil dependence to a zero-carbon renewable-energy infrastructure.
Moderate re-distribution was the more politically
radical
implication of Keynes’s economic theory, but the measures outlined above were also the limits of state intervention for him.
The Sunnis are divided, with the more moderate forces opposing the
radical
Al Qaeda affiliates.
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